Thursday, August 31, 2017

R and J Intro

Act 1

Bell Ringer:
8/31
What is True Love??????  (What is your definition?  Is love at first sight real?  How do you know when you are in love??????  How does one know when they are in love?? Explain and Support)
9/1 Friday: Who is the Tragic Hero?  Guess and give reasons
9/4 Tuesday -  Romeo pined for Ros. during the entire first act.  He walks into the ball, spots Juliet and fall in love.  Is this type of behavior common or uncommon for teenagers?  Explain
9/5-Wednesday - What was the key point to ACT 1

Students will relate to the concepts of betrayal and deception in modern society.
Students will discuss UNIVERSAL THEME

1. Students will review Act 1 Scenes 1, 2, 3, and 4
2. Students will read and discuss Act 1 scene 5
** Students should complete their work packets as we read
3. Review packet
Possible Quiz
4. Review project: for Romeo and Juliet:   PROJECT LINK
5. HOMEWORK: Student should review all of act 1 (This was assigned on 1/3)
-Read
-Highlight
-Take notes
**Finish entire scene


 Friday, 9/1
Drama Terms/ History Test
Continue reviewing / reading Act 1

Tuesday, 9/4
1. Vocab chapter 2 due with sentences
**Remember your context clues
2. Continue reading/ reviewing Act 1 R and J

Wednesday, 9/5
1,Quiz
2. Students will complete reflection questions (graded)
3. Students will read and discuss Act 2 scenes 1-3

Closure: (Each day)
Discuss character traits of new characters

Materials needed: Text, highlighter, writing utensil, binders, computer

Terms:  Prologue, Exposition

Monday, August 28, 2017

Renaissance History

Bell Ringer:

8/28
1. James is a STAUNCH supporter of his family
A. Impossible to recover   B. Producing wealth  C. Steadfast; loyal D. a stock of works  E. first public appearance
2. After loosing $10,000 last year, he closed the business when it was no longer LUCRATIVE..
A. Impossible to recover B. Producing wealth C. Steadfast; loyal D. a stock of works E. first public appearance

8/29

3. Terrified of this new experience, the singer was nervous before her DEBUT..
A. Impossible to recover B. Producing wealth C. Steadfast; loyal D. a stock of works E. first public appearance

4. The singer's REPERTOIRE was limited to show tunes.
A. Impossible to recover B. Producing wealth C. Steadfast; loyal D. a stock of works E. first public appearance
5. After the computer crashed, the files were IRRETRIEVABLE.
A. Impossible to recover B. Producing wealth C. Steadfast; loyal D. a stock of works E. first public appearance


8/30-
List 2 characteristics of a TRAGIC HERO
Connection:  The actual leaders of the Renaissance were TRAGIC HEROES

Goals:
Students will review vocabulary and examine context clues

Dates to remember:

Monday, 8/28-
Review Vocab 1
Introduce online textbook

Drama Terms, Renaissance History, and Vocab

Review Drama Terms 


Tuesday, 8/29- Finish Ren. History notes
Complete packet work
Pass out R and J books

Wednesday, 8/30 - Vocab 1 test

Have the Globe Theater notes copied into your R and J packets.

Friday, 9/4 Drama Terms Test

Monday, 9/7- Vocab 2 due with sentences


Textbook Information

Textbook Code - Online
www.pearsonsuccessnet.com

Register : Students

User name:  studenttextbook60
Password:  password 1

Textbook code: 8ed037f195b14916365e

Intro to Drama



A. Drama Terms

Drama Terms LINK
Poetry

B. Renaissance History

Renaissance History LINK

C. The Globe

The Globe LINK

D. Shakespeare; Living during the Renaissance - Lecture


Renaissance History

England must always have a strong king:

1455-1475 - War of the Roses
Yorks -White Rose - Stuarts
Tudors- Red Rose - Lancasters
**Note secession of royal families below

1475- Printing Press - Gutenberg

1485- Henry VII- First Tudor King

1492- Columbus discovers America

1509- Henry VIII - 6 wives; Catholic Church; Father of next three rulers

1516 Utopia - Sir Thomas Moore

1534- Proclamation of the English Church

1547-53 - Edward II

1553-58- Mary

1558-1603- Elizabeth I - Universal order
**Discoveries; Arts; Music; Writing; Sculpture; Military and Science/ Medicine
1558- Sir Walter Raleigh to VA

1558-1616- Book of the Courtier

1564- 1616 - Wm. Shakespeare - April 23:  37 plays - Renaissance man

1588- Defeat of the Spanish Armada
1588- Sir Walter Raliegh to Virginia

1590- Faerie Queen
1603- Elizabeth dies - Stuarts take over

1603- 25- James I (king) - Union of England and Scotland
1616 - Death of Shakespeare

1640- Charles 1

1640- Civil War

1642- Theaters closed and Charles is beheaded  (Puritan beliefs)

1660- Charles II - Restoration of the monarchy

CC.1.2.9-10.A: Determine a central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of the text, including how it emerges and is shaped and refined by specific details; provide an objective summary of the text.

CC.1.2.9-10.B: Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences and conclusions based on an author’s explicit assumptions and beliefs about a subject

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Review of 5 Paragraph Essay

We will begin class by exploring our ONE DRIVE and CLASS NOTEBOOK


Section 1- Bell ringer


8/23 Bell ringer:

Bell Ringer:
1.Sign in to your computer.  Sign in to your One Drive.  Access your Class Notebook for Integrated. 
Click on the section labeled DAILY WORKSHEETS.  Next, select Bell Ringer.  Follow the directions.

Bell Ringer- For each bell ringer, you will write the correct answer and circle the relevant context clues in the sentence. Then write your own sentence using the word in context.  That means we must be able to tell the meaning of the word from the detail in your sentence.

- ◦Determine the meaning of the underlined word using the context clues surrounding the term.  Circle the context clues.
◦Florence Nightingale, the famous nursing reformer, had the eccentric habit of carrying a pet owl around in one of her pockets.
–A. ordinary    B. odd  C. careful


 The great ballplayer and civil rights leader Jackie Robinson was the epitome of both physical and moral strength.
A. a perfect model  B. an opposite  C. a main cause


Adamant in his support of gun control, Senator Keen won’t give in to pressure from powerful opponents.

A. firm      B. uncertain      C. flexible
8/24 Bell ringer:
In your One Note Notebook
Write the Sentence.  Write the answer.  Place an arrow from the underlined word to the part of the sentence that serves as the context clue.

 In the ring, the two boxers were antagonists,  but in their private lives they were good friends.
–A. a supporters     B. enemies     C. examples
THERE ARE TWO WORD TODAY: 

ILL WILL BETWEEN THE TWO FAMILIES GOES BACK SO MANY GENERATIONS THAT NOBODY REMEMBERS WHAT ORIGINALLY CAUSED THE ANIMOSITY.

–A.  strong dislike      B. admiration  C.  great fear

My amiable dog greets both strangers and old friends with a happy yip and energetic tail-wagging.
–A. intelligent  B. uncaring  C. good-natured




Section 2

5 paragraph essay form

1. Students will review the form and technique for writing a 5 paragraph essay.
2. Students will become familiar with the various parts of the 5 paragraph essay

The five paragraph essay follows a defined format. The first paragraph introduces us to the thesis of the essay and directs us to the three main supporting subtopics. The second through fourth paragraphs are all similar in format. They individually restate the subtopics, and are developed by giving supporting information. The fifth and last paragraph restates the main thesis idea and reminds the reader of the three main supporting ideas that were developed. All of these paragraphs are important.
The introductory paragraph is the place in which the writer introduces the reader to the topic. It is important to make this a clear and limited statement. This is where the writer grabs the reader's attention. Because of its purpose, it is often the first sentence of the paragraph. It is followed by three subtopics that develop the thesis. Between this paragraph and all paragraphs of the essay, there needs to be some kind of a transition word, phrase, or sentence.Next, the body of the essay contains paragraphs two through four. They are all similarly constructed. Their topic sentences are restatements, often in original form, of the three supporting ideas presented in the first paragraph. The subtopic of each of the body paragraphs is again supported by three or more supporting sentences. These cement, in the reader's mind, the relevancy and relationship of each of the subtopics to the thesis statement.
Finally, the fifth paragraph is the summary paragraph. It is important to restate the thesis and three supporting ideas in an original and powerful manner as this is the last chance the writer has to convince the reader of the validity of the information presented. Because the purposes of the first and fifth paragraph are so similar that some writers construct them at the same time. They will edit them, as necessary, as they do with each and every part of the essay.It is important to reiterate that each of the paragraphs is joined together by a transition word, phrase or sentence. Transitions help the reader to follow the flow of the logic and sequencing. All of the essay types follow this basic transition format. However, there is more latitude with the narrative essay because of its nature.


To put it more visually, the structure model has been color coded and looks like this:
A. Opening paragraph:
Motivator
Brief Expansion of topic
Thesis Statement
Blueprint (*This contains subtopic 1, subtopic 2, and subtopic 3)
Transition
Introduction
http://members.tripod.com/~lklivingston/essay/intro.html

B. Three Body Paragraphs 
*The body paragraphs will follow the order of the three blueprint ideas

Topic sentence (Each body paragraph will restate subtopics 1,2, &3)
Specific detail /Example (Several specific examples must be used for each body paragraph)
Restate concept of each paragraph's point
(TRI Paragraphs)
Transition

*Example of body paragraph 1:

Restate Subtopic One
First Supporting Detail or Example
Second Supporting Detail or Example
Third Supporting Detail or Example
Transition
Supporting Paragraphs
http://www.orangeusd.k12.ca.us/yorba/paragraph_development.htm


C. Conclusion / Summary Paragraph
Make final points to sum up the essay. Restate / rephrase the thesis statement to stress the main topic of the essay.

Synthesis of main topic
Synthesis of Subtopic One
Synthesis of Subtopic Two
Synthesis of Subtopic Three 

Summary Paragraph
http://members.tripod.com/~lklivingston/essay/intro.html

Sample 5 paragraph essay:

http://geosoc.org/schools/PASSNEW/5paraessay.htm
The Five Paragraph Essay - Here is a sample to show you hot it all fits together. (Graphic organizer)
http://www.taftcollege.edu/newTC/Academic/LiberalArts/OWL/SAMPFIVE.HTML- a second example

TIP:
-Remember, the thesis statement must be consistent throughout the paper. Each paragraph must reflect one aspect of the thesis statement. This allows for strong focus, content development, organization and adds to the style of the paper.

Section 3

HOMEWORK
Students received Vocabulary Packets
Homework:  For Monday, 8/28
Complete vocab unit 1
On a separate paper, write original sentences for each vocab word.
*****BE SURE THAT YOU HAVE CONTEXT CLUES FOR EACH WORD IN YOUR SENTENCES.


Monday, August 21, 2017

Welcome

Integrated English Syllabus

Contact Information:

Instructor:                           Mrs. Theresa Christian

Email Address:                  tchristian@berwicksd.org

Planning Period:            2

Text and Resource Materials:
            Required Text:
Prentice Hall Literature, Grade 9 / 10
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
Shoeless Joe by Ray Kinsella
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austin
Once and Future King by T. H. White

Course Description:
·         An accelerated, honors-level course (1.5 credits) integrating advanced composition skills, academic writing, and a wide variety of world literature from multiple genres.
Core Ideas:
·         An accelerated course (1.5 credits) in preparation for English Department AP offerings
·         Literature content – “breadth over depth”
·         Assessment philosophy – “depth of analysis”
·         Reading focus – comprehension and analysis (literary and rhetorical choices)
·         Writing focus – the development of advanced composition skills in academic writing
·         Keystone test preparation – How to score advanced?
·         Pacing – finish main curriculum by May; review main ideas, concepts, skills; prepare for Keystone exam
·         Independent reading – “practice becomes habit”
·         *Drama unit – Draw parallels to the major themes and readings studied and read throughout the year
·         At conclusion of course, students will have the skills necessary to score advanced on Keystone exam and to enter into AP classes.

Prerequisites:  Application required

Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of the course, the student will be able to:

1.    Become more open-minded and well-rounded, and to understand the importance of being a life-long learner who is willing to study and understand new ideas, philosophies, and concepts.
2.       Expand their vocabulary.
3.       Further develop their critical thinking skills through reading and writing.
4.      Intensify their study and analysis of literature (both fiction and nonfiction).
5.       Perfect their writing and communication skills through various types of writing.
6.       Use computers and other types of media for learning purposes such as for research regarding novel background information and themes.

 Notes:
1. Bring a 2 inch binder to the class
2. Bring your laptops
3. Bring your summer work.  It will be collected on the first day of class.  This is a graded assignment that will be used to evaluate your writing.

Bell Ringer:
1.Sign in to your computer.  Sign in to your One Drive.  Access your Class Notebook for Integrated. 
Click on the section labeled DAILY WORKSHEETS.  Next, select Bell Ringer.  Follow the directions.

Bell Ringer- For each bell ringer, you will write the correct answer and circle the relevant context clues in the sentence. Then write your own sentence using the word in context.  That means we must be able to tell the meaning of the word from the detail in your sentence.

- ◦Determine the meaning of the underlined word using the context clues surrounding the term.  Circle the context clues.
◦Florence Nightingale, the famous nursing reformer, had the eccentric habit of carrying a pet owl around in one of her pockets.
–A. ordinary    B. odd  C. careful

- ◦Determine the meaning of the underlined word using the context clues surrounding the term.  Circle the context clues.

 The great ballplayer and civil rights leader Jackie Robinson was the epitome of both physical and moral strength.
A. a perfect model  B. an opposite  C. a main cause

-Determine the meaning of the underlined word using the context clues surrounding the term.  Circle the context clues

Adamant in his support of gun control, Senator Keen won’t give in to pressure from powerful opponents.
A. firm      B. uncertain      C. flexible



Common Core:
Reading
CC.1.3.9-10.B
L.F.2.1.1
L.F.2.1.1
L.F.2.3.4
L.F. 1.1
L.F.2.3.1
L.F.2.1.2

CC.1.3.9-10
L.F.1.1
L.F.1.3.1
L.F.1.3.2
L.F.2.3.6
L.F.2.5.2
C.C.1.5.9-10.C
L.F.2.3.5
L.F.2.2.3
CC.1.3.9-10.E 
CC.1.3.9-10.E
CC.1.3.9-10.K
L.F.1.2 & 2.5.1
L.F.1.3.2
L.F.1.2.3
L.F.1.2.2
L.F.1.2.1 & 3
L.F.2.4.1
L.F.1.2.4



Writing
CC.1.4.9-10
CC.1.4.9-10.B
CC.1.4.9-10.K
CC.1.4.9-10.E
CC.1.4.9-10.G
CC.1.4.9-10.H
CC.1.4.9-10.C
CC.1.4.9-10.I
CC.1.4.9-10.J
CC.1.4.9-10.T
CC.1.4.9-10.L

CC.1.4.9-10.W
CC.1.4.9-10.W
CC.1.5.9-10.C
CC.1.4.9-10.V

CC.1.4.9-10.W
CC.1.5.9-10.U
CC.1.5.9-10.F
CC.1.5.9-10